Soweto and Increased Pressure on the Apartheid State

Soweto and Increased Pressure on the Apartheid State

1970s: Soweto and increased pressure on the Apartheid state tricter apartheid laws were implemented in the 1960s. The Apartheid regime succeeded for a while in repressing resistance in S the country. However, in 1973 a series of labour strikes erupted, followed by the emergence of a new movement called Black Consciousness or BCM. There was an increase in youth activism which led to renewed resistance. Women played a large role in the resistance of the 1970s. University of Cape Town students protest against Apartheid and the education system in the 1970s. Source: Frescura Collection. University of the Witwatersrand students protest against Apartheid and the education system in the 1970s. Source: Frescura Collection. Linda Komape Komape founded the Transport and General Workers Union around 1978. Women and 1949- Here she worked to improve wages labour issues: and conditions and by the time she left The trade unions inda Komape was born in the membership stood at about 24 000. Transvaal in 1949 and experi- in the 1970s l From here, Komape began working enced Apartheid at a young age when with a union concerned with the rights n the 1960s, the country’s in- her father’s land and cattle were taken of female cleaning sta. She found out i dustrial economy had grown away. that many were sexually harassed at and by the 1970s black workers She began work in a factory in 1975. work and had no legal rights. Member- were becoming increasingly rest- She joined the Metal and Allied Work- ship of the union grew to 3 000 and less about exploitative working ers Union and played an active part conditions were improved. conditions. A number of strikes in the strikes of 1976. In 1977, she be- In 1984, Komape attended a workshop were held, particularly in Natal, came an organiser for the Metal and Al- organised by the Federation of Trans- and between 1973 and 1975 lied Workers Union, but spent the rst vaal Women (FEDTRAW) where she ob- many new trade unions were months doing odd jobs for men rather jected to the tradition of ‘lobola’ as she formed. than being given a proper role in the believed it objectied women. Union. She complained and, her activ- Women such as Linda Kom- ism yielded positive results. The sys- Throughout her life, Komape cam- ape and Emma Mashinini were tem was changed so that menial tasks paigned for the rights of women in the prominent trade unionists. They in the Union were equally divided be- workplace. fought for the rights of women in tween men and women. Komape later the workplace. moved from organizing to recruiting. 10 Women and the Black classes and adult education literacy classes. Consciousness Movement Biko was banned in 197. This meant that he was not allowed in the 1970s to speak to more than one person at a time, was restricted to certain areas, and could not make speeches in public. It was he Black Consciousness Movement (BCM) was led by also forbidden to quote anything he said, including speeches T a man called Steve Biko. The BCM was supported by or simple conversations, or to otherwise mention him. In spite many female intellectuals, and also appealed to young peo- of the repression of the Apartheid government, Biko and the ple. BCM encouraged all black South Africans to recognize BCM played a large role in inspiring protests, which led to the their inherent dignity and self-worth. In the 1970s, the BCM Soweto Uprising on 16 June 1976. spread from university campuses into urban black communi- ties throughout South Africa. A number of women, such as The State suppression of the BCM after the Soweto Upris- Baleka Kgositsile and Winnie Mandela were active in both the ing in 1976, and Biko’s death while in police custody in 1977, Black Consciousness Movement and the ANC underground. weakened the organizational base of the movement. In addi- tion, all the black consciousness organisations were banned The South African Student Organisation (SASO), formed in 1977, including the women’s organisations. in 1968 by Biko was largely responsible for spreading BCM among the youth. Women like Dr Mamphela Ramphele, Nko- Many of BCM’s supporters went into exile and the majority sazana Clarice Dlamini-Zuma and Sam Moodley were active joined the ANC and MK in exile. The PAC’s Azanian People’s in this organization. Liberation Army (APLA), the successor to Poqo, was also ac- tive in exile. However, the ANC’s MK grew over the years in Along with political action, a major part of the Black Con- international and national stature and became the more sciousness Movement was its Black Community Programs. powerful liberation movement. These Programmes included organizing community medi- cal clinics, aiding entrepreneurs, and holding “consciousness” Winnie Mandela talking at the launch Black Women’s Federation in Durban, 1975. Source: Bailey’s African History Archives. , Black Women s Federation organisations in Durban in protest of Meer’s banning. n 1975, some of the women supporters of BCM The women of the BWF also expressed solidarity with i formed the Black Women’s Federation (BWF) under the youth and supported them in their demonstrations the leadership of Fatima Meer. The aim of the BWF was against inferior black education. The first student pro- to bring black women together in a broad front to create tests were peaceful, but in 1976, riots broke out in Sowe- opportunities for themselves. Another prominent mem- to against the introduction of Afrikaans as a medium ber of this organization was Winnie Mandela. of instruction in their high schools. The BWF members were actively behind the students, and when the police A year after the formation of the federation, Fatima Meer opened fire on the students and 1-year-old Hector Pe- was banned. The government also banned a meeting terson was killed, they and others bitterly opposed the that was to be held by the BWF and other anti-Apartheid brutal police killing of young children. 11 paign against Apartheid laws. After tension and rioting between Indians and Africans in Natal, she helped estab- lish the Durban and Districts Women’s League to improve relations between Africans and Indians. Her activities led to her banning in 1952. In the 1970s, when the Black Consciousness Movement was at its height and Fatima Meer was the president of the Black Women’s Federation (BWF), she was again banned and was subsequently detained for trying to organise a rally with Steve Biko. Shortly after her release in 1976, Fatima survived an as- sassination attempt, when her house was petrol bombed. From the 1980s to the 1990s, she fought tirelessly for the Fatima Meer, Durban, 2002. Source: Gisele Wulfsohn. rights of shack-dwellers and rural migrants. She also head- ed the Natal Education Trust, which built schools in Um- Fatima Meer lazi, Port Shepstone and Inanda, and established a Crafts 1928 - 2010 Centre and the Tembalihle Tutorial College in Phoenix. Fatima Meer wrote more than 40 books on a wide variety atima Meer was brought up in a family that was of subjects and received many awards during her lifetime. f highly conscious of racial discrimination and she She also worked with non-governmental welfare bodies therefore became a tireless defender of the oppressed. and served in advisory positions for the new democratic She went to the University of Natal, where she completed government. a Masters degree in Sociology. Meer died in March 2010 following a stroke which she had Fatima joined the 1946 Indian Passive Resistance Cam- two weeks before her death. She was buried in Durban. Winnie Madikizela- Mandela 1936 - n the mid-1950s Nomzamo Winfreda Madikizela became i involved in the ANC and she met Nelson Mandela, who was then one of the Deance Campaign organisers. They were married in 1958. In 1962 Winnie Mandela was banned under the Suppression of Communism Act for her part in the struggle and was re- stricted to the Orlando Township in Soweto. Always a ery woman she repeatedly aunted this order and was charged on a number of occasions. In 1969 she was detained under the Terrorism Act and was placed in solitary connement for 17 months. In 1970 she was placed under house arrest. During the 1976 uprisings, she helped to establish the Black Women’s Federation and the Black Parents’ Association which were both allied to the Black Consciousness Movement. In 1977 she was detained under the Internal Security Act and banished to the small dusty town of Brandfort in the Orange Free State. There she helped set up a crèche and a clinic with Dr. Abu Baker Asvat. Winnie Mandela returned to her home in Soweto in 1986 and resumed her ANC activities. She stood next to her husband, The voices of the crowd rose in song outside the Palace of Justice Nelson Mandela, when he was released from prison on 11 as Winnie Mandela appeared on the steps and left the courtroom. February 1990. However, the couple divorced in March 1996. Nelson Mandela’s mother is behind her, having come all the way from Umtata to hear that her son had been found guilty of sabo- Since 1994 she has served the ANC and government in vari- tage and sentenced to life imprisonment. The Rivonia Trial, 1964. ous positions. Source: Pretoria News. 12 Women’s role in the 1976 Soweto Revolt and mounting pressure on the Apartheid state he 1976 Soweto riots ushered in an era of in- t creased confrontation between the State and political organisations ghting for liberation. A new generation of young people was committed to the struggle against Apartheid.

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